webbmeister
Gold Member
Hi Everybody:
Well, Thor (new 25D) is now paid for, and scheduled for delivery April 1st. I hope there is no significance to that date!
Anyway, we just got our quotes for the timber frame home back from the builders. The good news is that the bottom lines are similar. The bad news is that they are way way way over budget. So I have a short description, and then a question:
We are a family of two, and don't need a lot of bedrooms in the house. We'll die in this house, and we have no heirs. We couldn't care less about resale value. To make the house really open, we followed the lead of a Michigan couple and deleted the upstairs bedroom/bathroom area, so the rooms under that area now go straight up to the ceiling just as the greatroom does. To see this, you can go here (the area in question is directly above the kitchen, dining room, and breakfast nook):
http://www.riverbendtf.com/articles/article2.html
Here's the punchline/question. The size of the home was 3379 sq.ft. before the bedroom/bathroomectomy. The size of the home after this operation? 3379 sq.ft. Cost per square foot unchanged from version A (with bedrooms and bathroom) and version B (after removal of this second floor area,) and the contractors are using the sq. ft. number to calculate their bids. I don't understand how the sq. ft. doesn't change when you remove rooms. The architect explains that the exterior walls have to go up the same height as before, and the roof has to cover the same square footage. I say a floor, the walls and finish for two bedrooms, and an entire bathroom have been deleted.
Again, I don't get it! Anybody here smarter than me on this topic?
Thanks,Jim
Well, Thor (new 25D) is now paid for, and scheduled for delivery April 1st. I hope there is no significance to that date!
Anyway, we just got our quotes for the timber frame home back from the builders. The good news is that the bottom lines are similar. The bad news is that they are way way way over budget. So I have a short description, and then a question:
We are a family of two, and don't need a lot of bedrooms in the house. We'll die in this house, and we have no heirs. We couldn't care less about resale value. To make the house really open, we followed the lead of a Michigan couple and deleted the upstairs bedroom/bathroom area, so the rooms under that area now go straight up to the ceiling just as the greatroom does. To see this, you can go here (the area in question is directly above the kitchen, dining room, and breakfast nook):
http://www.riverbendtf.com/articles/article2.html
Here's the punchline/question. The size of the home was 3379 sq.ft. before the bedroom/bathroomectomy. The size of the home after this operation? 3379 sq.ft. Cost per square foot unchanged from version A (with bedrooms and bathroom) and version B (after removal of this second floor area,) and the contractors are using the sq. ft. number to calculate their bids. I don't understand how the sq. ft. doesn't change when you remove rooms. The architect explains that the exterior walls have to go up the same height as before, and the roof has to cover the same square footage. I say a floor, the walls and finish for two bedrooms, and an entire bathroom have been deleted.
Again, I don't get it! Anybody here smarter than me on this topic?
Thanks,Jim